834 results on '"Kirk, David A."'
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2. Challenges with Using Formative and Authentic Assessment in Physical Education Teaching from Experienced Teachers' Perspectives
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Barrientos Hernán, Emilio J., López-Pastor, Víctor M., Lorente-Catalán, Eloísa, and Kirk, David
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The main purpose of this study was to identify the challenges of using formative assessment (FA) and authentic assessment (AA) in physical education (PE) teaching, based on some experienced teachers' perspectives. Semi-structured interviews of four teachers were conducted and analysed. The results show how the teachers operationalised the FA and AA to support student learning. They emphasised that to obtain positive results for teachers and pupils, it is key that the teaching is organised with assessment in mind, and that the assessment is structured. The study concludes that with pedagogic knowledge and a positive attitude to use the FA and AA, it is possible to overcome the drawbacks revealed in the PE assessment literature. Nevertheless, these teachers belonged to communities of practice linked to the FA and AA in PE, which seems to be a key factor to achieve the desired 'assessment literacy' needed to initiate those changes in PE.
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- 2023
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3. Application of Machine Learning Models to Biomedical and Information System Signals From Critically Ill Adults
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Lilly, Craig M., Kirk, David, Pessach, Itai M., Lotun, Gurudev, Chen, Ofer, Lipsky, Ari, Lieder, Iris, Celniker, Gershon, Cucchi, Eric W., and Blum, James M.
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- 2024
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4. Rental Assistance and a Fresh Start to Spur Criminal Desistance : Evidence From a Pilot Housing Experiment
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Kirk, David S.
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- 2023
5. Is Police Misconduct Contagious? Non-trivial Null Findings from Dallas, Texas
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Simpson, Cohen R. and Kirk, David S.
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- 2023
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6. NEIGHBORHOODS’ PERIL FOR THE FORMERLY INCARCERATED
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kirk, david
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- 2022
7. Coaches' Perceptions of Sport Education: A Response to Precarity through a Pedagogy of Affect
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García López, Luis Miguel and Kirk, David
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Purpose: The aim of this study was to investigate coaches' perceptions of using sport education (SE) for the first time with socially vulnerable children in order to explore its suitability for equipping young people living in precarity with the skills they need to take positive action to challenge their socially vulnerable backgrounds. In doing so, we want to explore what experiences of learning to use SE these coaches had and what their perspectives of the children's learning were. Settings and participants: The study developed in a community-based program in three economically disadvantaged neighbourhoods with high rates of delinquency in a city in Central Spain. The programme is run by a non-governmental organization and is funded by several public institutions and private donations. The study included three youth workers who acted as coaches and 31 nine- to eleven-year-olds from different ethnic groups. Programme: The SE season comprised 36 one-hour sessions which included an introduction to SE and the activity called ringo (two lessons), a pre-season (14 lessons), a season (18 lessons) and culminating event preparation and celebration (two lessons). Ringo is a net game, which was chosen to improve participation. Data collection/analysis: Four focus groups were conducted with the coaches and an open analysis format was followed, using open-ended questions. The first author also kept a diary of his experience as a participant observer, including field notes and participation in focus groups. The data were transcribed verbatim and analysed through thematic analysis. Findings: Three major results were found. First, although coaches perceived that sport had a great potential for children to get several benefits, the quality of the pedagogical strategies they used to implement before the study did not allow them to reach those benefits. Second, SE gave the coaches the possibility to enact an ethic of care with participant children; emotional labour played a key role in that process, allowing coaches to care both for children and for themselves. Third, coaches appreciated how SE features, especially competition, teams, festivity, and the culminating event, favoured motivation and engagement, what improved behaviour and the assumption of roles responsibilities. Conclusions: Sport per se is not enough to teach ethical conduct. However, a quality programme which exposes young people to the stimuli they need, and efficient physical educators who can develop the programme properly and with a coherent attitude are necessary. Pre-service education for any future professional working with youth from socially vulnerable backgrounds (teachers, coaches, youth workers) should consider the need of teaching pedagogies of affect like SE as well as the development of an ethic of care and emotional labour.
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- 2022
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8. Empowering Children from Socially Vulnerable Backgrounds through the Use of Roles in Sport Education
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García López, Luis M. and Kirk, David
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Sport and physical education are considered a powerful tool to empower children from socially vulnerable backgrounds (SVB). The purpose of this study was to analyse coaches' perceptions of the effect of the Sport Education (SE) pedagogical model, and use of the allocation of roles beyond player in particular, on the empowerment of children from SVB who participated in a community-based programme. Participants included three coaches, the lead researcher and 31 nine- to eleven-year-olds (17 boys and 14 girls) from diverse ethnic groups (Roma, North African, Latin-American, Caucasian and sub-Saharan). A 36 one-hour session's SE season was implemented. The data were obtained by four focus groups (before implementing the programme; at the end of the pre-season; after the first round of the formal competition; when the programme was completed) and a diary of the lead researcher who participated as participant observer. Coaches' perceived that SE roles were authentic empowering strategies to help children from SVB to have experiences of meaningful participation in a safe environment, sharing power through the responsibilities they assumed, collaboration, and challenging gender stereotypes. In order to accomplish those results, SE had a flexible implementation in terms of duration and roles assignment to become more student-centred, roles were clearly defined to guarantee a safe environment for the children coaches showed an authentic ethic of care, and gender stereotypes were broken through going beyond the equality of opportunities.
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- 2022
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9. Becoming the Divas of SUS: The Construction of a Community of Active Women in a Socially Vulnerable Context
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Ferreira, Heidi Jancer, Drigo, Alexandre Janotta, and Kirk, David
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Given the rapid growing number of the ageing population worldwide, it has been questioned how health and wellbeing in old age can be improved, especially for women in socially vulnerable contexts. Research have shown that social aspects are key determinants for older-age groups' engagement in an active life. It is crucial to understand older people's experiences with physical activity in order to develop interventions that contribute to health promotion beyond disease prevention. The study's purpose was to explore the experiences of middle-aged and older socially vulnerable women with physical activity within a public-funded programme under the "Sistema Único de Saúde" -- SUS [Brazilian public healthcare system]. The study involved a Health and Physical Education professional and 16 women (43-66y) who regularly attended the programme. Data were generated through condensed fieldwork, employing semi-structured interviews and non-participant observation of sessions. Drawing on salutogenesis theory and a critical gender perspective, a qualitative analysis was conducted using the constant comparative method. From the women's experiences, a major finding was the construction of a community of active women, which served as a collective resource to support them in the process of health development. Relating to the emerging community, another three themes were developed. The first was dancing and challenging the gender order, referring to women's experiences of negotiating a collective identity and disrupting the invisibility of their bodies. The second was the HPE professional's dialogical pedagogies as emancipatory, revealing the ways in which the community was supported. The third was the empathetic relationships among the women as a way of coping, representing the women's positive experiences of social support, connectedness and resilience. The findings supported the conclusion that there are promising possibilities for research and practice in socially vulnerable contexts to widen the contributions to health promotion that are not limited to exercise prescription.
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- 2022
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10. Exploring Pupils' and Physical Education Teachers' Views on the Contribution of Physical Education to Health and Wellbeing in the Affective Domain
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Teraoka, Eishin and Kirk, David
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Physical education is expected to play a significant role in developing pupils' health. This is the case in Scotland, where physical education is located in a prioritised cross-curricular area of Health and Wellbeing (HWB). However, there is a lack of evidence on the extent to which physical education contributes to pupils' HWB under the new curriculum. Given that there is a growing interest in exploring how teachers enact pedagogies as a response to mental health issues, this study seeks to examine the practices of teachers who identify as being committed to pedagogies of affect within a sample of Scottish secondary schools. The purpose of this study was to report how pupils and teachers talk about the contribution of physical education to pupils' HWB, with a particular focus on the affective domain. The study on which this paper is based used qualitative methods within a grounded theory approach. Six physical education teachers who were from four different secondary schools participated in semi-structured interviews. Pupils were selected by the teachers and participated in focus group interviews. We outlined two main themes: (1) teachers' and pupils' practices in building confidence in pupils, which was exclusive to the female pupils and teachers; (2) teachers' concerns with building relationships with pupils. A notable finding was that teachers who had an explicit and direct intention for affective learning among their pupils sought to build a trusting relationship with pupils as a basic concern to implement teaching for affective learning, rather than the need for an emphasis on lesson contents and specific teaching approaches. This study could be a valuable resource for teacher professional learning as the findings referred to teachers' regular practices and their knowledge of the curriculum, especially for those who recognise a need to enact pedagogies of affect.
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- 2022
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11. Pedagogies of Embodiment in Physical Education -- A Literature Review
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Aartun, Iselin, Walseth, Kristin, Standal, Øyvind Førland, and Kirk, David
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Physical education puts the body center stage. Embodiment has emerged as a concept that broadens the focus on the body beyond the dualistic natural scientific point of view. Research into embodied learning and embodiment has had various focuses, including the sociological aspects of embodiment and the embodied experiences of students. This article is a literature review of peer-reviewed empirical studies aiming to explore empirical research on pedagogies of embodiment in physical education. We ask what characterizes the empirical research literature on pedagogies of embodiment in physical education, and what implications for teaching and learning we can find in this literature. Forty-two studies met the criteria and were included in the review. Based on a thematic analysis of the studies, two main themes emerged. The first theme, 'enabling critical reflection', highlights that physical education can contribute to the development of critical thinking skills among pupils and provide them with safe spaces to discuss 'taken for granted' understandings of gender, health, and body ideals within physical education. The second main theme, 'Exploring (new) movements', shows how pupils' exploration of (new) movements can contribute to the development of body awareness and meaningful experiences. Physical education taught after principles of pedagogies of embodiment involves pupil-centered approaches and inductive approaches to teaching. These approaches give pupils the opportunity to be involved in choosing activities and creating content. Pedagogies of embodiment place focus on the importance of reflection before, during, and after activities in physical education, and expand the repertory of activities that physical education may include. In this way, pedagogies of embodiment may facilitate embodied learning, empowerment, and positive experiences of being in movement. Future research should investigate further the possibilities pedagogies of embodiment gives for teachers and learners, and how the potential to challenge traditional pedagogy can be developed.
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- 2022
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12. The Importance of Living Arrangements for Criminal Persistence and Desistance: A Novel Test of Exposure to Convicted Family Members
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Hassan, Said, Kirk, David S., and Andersen, Lars Højsgaard
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- 2022
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13. Cohort Profile: Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods and Its Additions (PHDCN+)
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Sampson, Robert J., Kirk, David S., and Bucci, Rebecca
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- 2022
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14. Affective Learning in Physical Education: A Systematic Review
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Teraoka, Eishin, Jancer Ferreira, Heidi, Kirk, David, and Bardid, Farid
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Purpose: The purpose of this study was to carry out a systematic review of intervention programs that have addressed affective learning outcomes within physical education and to explore pedagogical practices in alignment with teaching, lesson content, and learning outcomes. Method: The literature search was conducted in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses statement. Included were 26 peer-reviewed pedagogical studies of physical education programs that addressed affective outcomes and reported fidelity of implementation. Results and Discussion: Affective outcomes were grouped into four themes: motivation, emotional responses, self-concept, and resilience. The findings showed that offering choice, encouraging peer feedback, asking deductive questions, focusing on personal improvement, and differentiating are effective teaching strategies that were widely used to support affective learning in children and adolescents. This review highlights the importance of fidelity of implementation to understand how intervention programs are delivered.
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- 2021
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15. Reducing Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections Across a Hospital System Through Urine Culture Stewardship
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Kalorin, Carmin M., Dixon, Jessica M., Fike, Lucy V., Paul, J. West, Chawla, Neal K., Kirk, David, Woltz, Patricia C., and Stone, Nimalie D.
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- 2022
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16. Dual pathways of concealed gun carrying and use from adolescence to adulthood over a 25-year era of change.
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Lanfear, Charles C., Kirk, David S., and Sampson, Robert J.
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ADULTS , *ADOLESCENCE , *SHOOTINGS (Crime) , *FIREARMS , *YOUNG adults , *PISTOLS , *TEENAGE girls - Abstract
Most homicides in the United States are committed using a handgun, but little research examines gun carrying over critical stages of the life course and changing contexts of violence. Notably, although most of the handgun homicides are committed by adults, most research on concealed gun carrying focuses on adolescents in single cohort studies. Using more than 25 years of longitudinal multicohort data from Chicago, 1994-2021, we show that pathways of concealed gun carrying are distinct between adolescence and adulthood. Adolescent carrying is often age-limited and responsive to direct exposure to gun violence (witnessing and victimization), while adult carrying is a persistent behavior that is less tied to direct exposure. The onset of concealed carry is also a strong predictor of later gun use (shooting or brandishing), and we find distinct patterns of gun use between individuals who first carry in adolescence versus adulthood. We discuss the implications of these dual pathways for research and policies on firearm use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. The promise and perils of the sharing economy: The impact of Airbnb lettings on crime.
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Lanfear, Charles C. and Kirk, David S.
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COLLECTIVE efficacy , *SOCIAL control , *CRIME statistics , *FIXED effects model , *SOCIAL disorganization , *BURGLARY - Abstract
Private short‐term letting via Airbnb has exploded in the last decade, yet little is known about how this affects neighborhood crime rates. We estimate the association between Airbnb short‐term letting activity and six types of police‐reported crime in London, as well as an intervening mechanism, collective efficacy. We estimate these associations with maximum likelihood dynamic panel models with fixed effects (ML‐SEM) using data on Airbnb lettings in 4,835 London neighborhoods observed for 13 calendar quarters. We explore mechanisms for the observed effects using multiple lag specifications and by disaggregating lettings into entire properties and spare rooms. We find that Airbnb activity is positively related to robbery, burglary, theft, and violence. These associations are attributable to lettings for entire properties rather than for rooms. Furthermore, associations are contemporaneous, as is consistent with an opportunity mechanism, rather than delayed, as would be consistent with a social control mechanism. Similarly, we find that the association between Airbnb activity and crime is not mediated by collective efficacy. Overall, these results suggest short‐term letting contributes to neighborhood crime and these effects are more likely to be attributable to changes in criminal opportunity than erosion of neighborhood social control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Pedagogical Practices in Health Promotion: Health-Related Bodily Practices for Adults and Older People
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Ferreira, Heidi Jancer, Kirk, David, and Drigo, Alexandre Janotta
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Background: It is well established in the literature how exercise prevents chronic diseases. Nevertheless, we still lack knowledge about the ways in which health-related bodily practices might contribute to health promotion. Less is known about pedagogies in public health directed at adult and older-age groups, within non-formal educational settings. Considering a lack of tailored and attractive approaches to health-related bodily practices for adults and older people [Pettigrew et al. 2019. "Encouraging Older People to Engage in Resistance Training: A Multi-Stakeholder Perspective." "Ageing & Society" 39 (8): 1806-1825; Van Dyck, D., L. Mertens, G. Cardon, K. De Cocker, and I. De Bourdeaudhuij. 2017. "Opinions Toward Physical Activity, Sedentary Behavior, and Interventions to Stimulate Active Living During Early Retirement: Qualitative Study in Recently Retired Adults." Journal of Aging and Physical Activity 25 (2): 277-286], we argue that there is a need to explore pedagogical practices that might further health promotion with this target group. Purpose: Drawing on Antonovsky's theory of salutogenesis [1996. "The Salutogenic Model as a Theory to Guide Health Promotion." "Health Promotion International" 11 (1): 11-18], the purpose of the study was to investigate how health and physical education (HPE) professionals delivered health-related bodily practices for adults and older people in community-based programmes. Data collection and analysis: A qualitative and grounded theory study design was employed. Participants included six HPE professionals, three health centre coordinators and thirty-four adults and older people enrolled in four community-based programmes from Brazil. Condensed fieldwork was adopted to generate data through three-days visits to each programme. Multiple data sources comprised semi-structured interviews, non-participant observation of health-related bodily practices sessions and documents/materials produced by participants. Data were analysed through open, axial and selective coding, using the constant comparative method [Charmaz 2006. "Constructing Grounded Theory: A Practical Guide Through Qualitative Analysis. Book." Vol. 10. London: Sage Publications]. Findings: Three themes were generated to explain the ways HPE professionals worked with adults and older people in health promotion: adopting a holistic view of health, serving as a health resource and nurturing further health resources. These practices included caring attitudes, such as listening carefully to adults and older people, showing attentiveness and responsiveness to them. Moreover, a key finding indicated that the HPE professionals served in their pedagogical practices as health resources, which the adults and older people learned to draw on to cope with life situations and experience health development. Conclusion: The HPE professionals in the four programmes demonstrated they were capable of moving beyond a solely biomedical approach to health and focus on the salutary factors that enable health promotion through the development of a combination of pedagogical practices that were consistent with salutogenesis.
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- 2021
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19. Assessment for Tactical Learning in Games: A Systematic Review
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Barquero-Ruiz, Carmen, Arias-Estero, José Luis, and Kirk, David
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The assessment of tactics is a subject of great interest in physical education and sport pedagogy. However, the lack of knowledge of the topic and the variety of assessment instruments make the assessment of tactics difficult. This study aimed to describe assessment in relation to tactical learning outcomes through an analysis of assessment instruments, based on variables that must be considered when using an instrument: (a) criteria definitions; (b) tactical levels; (c) indexes; (d) units of observation; (e) player/learner roles; and (f) institutional contexts. Hence, the following instruments were found: Game Performance Assessment Instrument, spatial location instruments, game performance evaluation tool, team sport assessment procedure, and system of tactical assessment in Soccer. Building on the review's purpose, the following issues were found. First, some studies reviewed used non-validated criteria. Second, not all studies considered the three tactical levels (match level, partial forefront level and primary level). Third, the majority of the studies used indexes that masked the results. Fourth, the individual unit of observation was widely used to assess global tactical learning outcomes. Fifth, many instruments were used in contexts for which they were not validated. According to these limitations, general recommendations are proposed. First, researchers should use validated instruments as long as the characteristics of the instruments are aligned with the nature of the study. Second, it is recommended when validating an instrument to consider the following general guidelines: (a) only use validated criteria descriptions; (b) include all three tactical levels; (c) do not use indexes; (d) use the team as the unit of observation; (e) assess both defender and attacker roles; (f) develop the instrument in the same institutional context as the study context; (g) include context variables if applicable.
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- 2020
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20. Evidence of the Effect of Police Violence on Citizen Crime Reporting
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Desmond, Matthew, Papachristos, Andrew V., and Kirk, David S.
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- 2020
21. Impact of heat stress and a feed supplement on hormonal and inflammatory responses of dairy cows
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Marins, Thiago N., Gao, Jing, Yang, Qiang, Binda, Rafael M., Pessoa, Caíque M.B., Orellana Rivas, Ruth M., Garrick, Morgan, Melo, Victor H.L.R., Chen, Yun-Chu, Bernard, John K., Garcia, Miriam, Chapman, James D., Kirk, David J., and Tao, Sha
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- 2021
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22. Twelve-month observational study of children with cancer in 41 countries during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Md Hasanuzzaman, Mohamed Ahmed, Ahmed Samir, Charlotte Smith, Lubna Samad, Vaishnavi Govind, Fakher Rahim, Ahmed Moussa, Adesoji O Ademuyiwa, Bobby John, Augusto Zani, Vivek Singh, Muhammad Arshad, Sadaf Altaf, Chan Hon Chui, Pooja Kumari, Thomas Smith, Ayesha Saleem, Matthew HV Byrne, Madhivanan Karthigeyan, Pravin Salunke, Darica Au, Kate Cross, Kokila Lakhoo, Vishal Kumar, Anna Maria Testi, Robyn Brown, Noel Peter, Georgios Tsoulfas, Francesco Pata, Adesoji Ademuyiwa, Tahmina Banu, Bruce Bvulani, Milind Chitnis, Maryam Ghavami Adel, Vrisha Madhuri, Pierfrancesco Lapolla, Andrea Mingoli, Hamidah Alias, Simone de Campos Vieira Abib, Ibukunolu Olufemi Ogundele, Felix M Alakaloko, Emmanuel A Ameh, Laila Hessissen, Kareem O Musa, Georgios Karagiannidis, Manoj Gupta, Maricarmen Olivos, Daniel Rhee, Maryam Khan, Christine Nitschke, Alexandra Valetopoulou, Ashrarur Rahman Mitul, Sabbir Karim, Mahmoud M Saad, Francis Abantanga, Gaetano Gallo, Mohamedraed Elshami, Mahmoud Elfiky, Soham Bandyopadhyay, Muath Alser, Elliott H Taylor, Duha Jasim, Somy Charuvila, Nazmul Islam, William B Lo, Uttam Kumar Nath, Robin Simpson, Zarina Abdul Latiff, Bruno Cirillo, Gioia Brachini, Megan Murphy, Zineb Bentounsi, Anette S Jacobsen, Anna Casey, Mohammed Alhendy, Taiwo Akeem Lawal, Samson Olori, Michael Boettcher, Muhammed Elhadi, Shaun Wilson, Dragana Janić, Amit Sehrawat, Patricia Shinondo, Shireen Anne Nah, Alhassan Abdul-Mumin, Karl-Heinz Frosch, Poorvaprabha Patil, Sarah Muma, Md Asaduzzaman, Athanasios Tragiannidis, Vijayendra Kumar, Mahan Salehi, Sara Ali, Renu Madan, Hafeez Abdelhafeez, Max Pachl, Benjamin Martin, Sonal Nagras, Mihir Sheth, Catherine Dominic, Suraj Gandhi, Divya Parwani, Rhea Raj, Diella Munezero, Rohini Dutta, Nsimire Mulanga Roseline, Kellie McClafferty, Armin Nazari, Smrithi Sriram, Sai Pillarisetti, King-David Nweze, Aishwarya Ashwinee, Gul Kalra, Priyansh Nathani, Khushman Kaur Bhullar, Nehal Rahim, Shweta Madhusudanan, Joshua Erhabor, Manasi Shirke, Aishah Mughal, Sravani Royyuru, Syeda Namayah Fatima Hussain, Daniel Robinson, Mehdi Khan, Alexandre Dukundane, Kwizera Festus, Rohan Pancharatnam, Lorraine Ochieng, Hritik Nautiyal, Leanne Gentle, Ehab Hanafy, Catherine Yang, Gideon Karplus, John Mathew, Olumide Abiodun Elebute, Oluwaseun Ladipo-Ajayi, Okechukwu Hyginus Ekwunife, Sherief Ghozy, Emily Hamilton, Dhruva Ghosh, Ahmed Sherif, Hajar Moujtahid, Ariana Axiaq, Amir Labib, Eman Abdulwahed, Kemal Tolga Saracoglu, Yasin Kara, Ahmed Y Azzam, Omar Elmandouh, Manjul Tripathi, Abdelrahman Azzam, Anfel Bouderbala, Aouabed Nesrine, Ammar Ayman, Mohamed Bonna, Safia Lorabi, Hira Zuberi, Iyad Sultan, Reto M Baertschiger, Kefas John Bwala, AM Umar, Abdurahaman Aremu, Dauda E Suleiman, Tybat Aliyu, Kashaf Turk, Oluseyi Oyebode Ogunsua, Tunde Talib Sholadoye, Musliu Adetola Tolani, Yakubu Alfa, Keffi Mubarak Musa, Ken Muma, Mitchelle Obat, Youssef Sameh Badran, Abdulrahman Ghassan Qasem, Faris Ayasra, Reema Alnajjar, Mohamed Abdel-Maboud, Abdelrahman Bahaa, Ayat M Saadeldin, Mohamed Adwi, Mahmoud Adly, Abdallah Elshenawy, Amer Harky, Kirstie Wright, Jessica Luyt, Olivia White, Nathan Thompson, Imogen Harrison, Sara Kader Alsaeiti, Fatma Saleh Benkhial, Hend Mohammed Masoud, Mabroukah Saeid Alshamikh, Fatma Mohammed Masoud, Nyararai Togarepi, Elaine Carrolan, Ahmed Saleh, Mahmoud Bassiony, Mostafa Qatora, Mohamed Bahaaeldin, Shady Fadel, Yasmine El Chazli, Kamel Hamizi, Mehdi Anouar Zekkour, Rima Rahmoun, Boutheyna Drid, Salma Naje Abu Teir, Mohamed Yazid Kadir, Yassine Zerizer, Nacer Khernane, Brahim Saada, Imane Ammouze, Yahya Elkaoune, Ghita Chaoui, Hajar Benaouda, Meryem Gounni, Narjiss Aji, Joana Mafalda Monteiro, Susana Nunes, Maria do Bom-Sucesso, Kerri Becktell, Md Afruzul Alam, Orindom Shing Pulock, Tasmiah Tahera Aziz, Rosanda Ilic, Danica Grujicic, Tijana Nastasovic, Igor Lazic, Mihailo Milicevic, Vladimir Bascarevic, Radovan Mijalcic, Vuk Scepanovic, Aleksandar Stanimirovic, Aleksandra Paunovic, Ivan Bogdanovic, Shahnoor Islam, AKM Amirul Morshed, Mehnaz Akter, Zannat Ara, Mohammed Tanvir Ahammed, Tania Akter, Kamrun Nahar, Fatema Sayed, Ashfaque Nabi, Elif Akova, Evren Aydogmus, Bekir Can Kendirlioglu, Tufan Hicdonmez, Asim Noor Rana, Mohammed A Azab, Alzhraa Salah Abbas, Olanrewaju Moses, Ibiyeye Taiye Taibat, Taiwo Jones, Kalu Ukoha, Olagundoye Goke, Okorie Ikechukwu, Abiodun Idowu Okunlola, Helga Nauhaus, Danelle Erwee, Agata Chylinska, Prasanna Gomes, Elvercio Pereira de Oliveira Junior, Fabiola Leonelli Diz, Mohamed El Kassas, Usama Eldaly, Ahmed Tawheed, Mohamed Abdelwahab, Oudrhiri Mohammed Yassaad, Bechri Hajar, El Ouahabi Abdessamad, Arkha Yasser, Hessissen Laila, Farah Sameer Yahya, Maria Teresa Peña Gallardo, Jacqueline Elizabeth Montoya Vásquez, Juan Luis García León, Sebastián Shu Yip, Mariam Lami, Harmit Ghattaura, Eric W Etchill, Stacy Cooper, Kevin Crow, Morgan Drucker, Benjamin Shou, Alan Siegel, Gül Nihal Özdemir, Ehab El Refaee, John George Massoud, Ayah Bassam Ibrahim, Ruaa Bassam Ibrahim, Faris Abu Za'nouneh, Toqa Fahmawee, Ghazwani Salman, Ehab Alameer, Al-Mudeer Ali, Ghazwani Yahia, Khozairi Waleed, Khalil Ghandour, Shaima' Al-Dabaibeh, Ammar Al-Basiti, Hazim Ababneh, Omaima El-Qurneh, Yousef Alalawi, Ahmad Al Ayed, Naif Al Bolowi, Heidi Barola, Aubrey L Pagaduan, Jingdan Fan, Olufemi Oni, Janita Zarrish, Ramsha Saleem, Soha Zahid, Atiqa Amirali, Ahsan Nadeem, Sameer Saleem Tebha, Zonaira Qayyum, Sana Tahir, Anneqa Tahir, Rabbey Raza Khan, Ayesha Mehmood, Taimur Iftikhar Qureshi, Victor Calvagna, Nathalie Galea, Matthew R Schuelke, Kirk David Wyatt, Agnes Vojcek, Seham M Ragab, Abdallah R Allam, Eman Ibrahim Hager, Kıvılcım Karadeniz Cerit, Adnan Dağçınar, Tümay Umuroğlu, Ayten Saraçoğlu, Mustafa Sakar, Can Kıvrak, Gül Çakmak, Ibrahim Sallam, Gamal Amira, Mohamed Sherief, Arissa Ikeda, Licia Portela, Marianne Monteiro Garrigo, Fernanda Lobo, Sima Ester Ferman, Andrew Nwankwo Osuigwe, Chisom Adaobi Nri-Ezedi, Eric Okechukwu Umeh, Abiodun Folashade Adekanmbi, Olubunmi Motunrayo Fatungase, Olubunmi Obafemi Obadaini, Sarah Al-Furais, Humaida Hemlae, Sreylis Nay, Fabianne Altruda de Moraes Costa Carlesse, Denis Cozzi, Paolo Musiu, Paolo Sapienza, Martina Zambon, Simona Meneghini, Pierfranco Cicerchia, Abdulrahman Omar Taha, Bouaoud Souad, Mebarki Malika, Bioud Belkacem, Fayza Haider, Halwani Yaninga Fuseini, Peter Gyamfi Kwarteng, Abubakari Bawa Abdulai, Sheba Mary Pognaa Kunfah, Stephanie Ajinkpang, Mary Joan Kpiniong, Kingsley Aseye Hattor, Kingsley Appiah Bimpong, Mohamed Elbahnasawy, Sherief Abdelsalam, Amanpreet Brar, Andreea C Matei, Hira Khalid Zuberi, Kishwer Nadeem, Naema Khayyam, Fatima Ambreen Imran, Nida Zia, Sadia Muhammad, Muhammad Rafie Raza, Muhammad Rahil Khan, Alaa Hamdan, Abdeljawad Mazloum, Ali Abodest, Nisreen Ali, Ammar Omran, Alaa Ahmed, Munawar Hraib, Victor Khoury, Abdulrahman Almjersah, Mohammad Ali Deeb, Akram Ahmed, Ahmad Bouhuwaish, Alqasim Abdulkarim, Marwa Biala, Reem Ghamgh, Amani Alamre, Marwa Shelft, Hoda Tawel, Emmanuel Hatzipantelis, Eleni Tsotridou, Assimina Galli-Tsinopoulou, C-Khai Loh, Doris Lau, Kelvin Ifeanyichukwu Egbuchulem, Olakayode Olaolu Ogundoyin, Isaac Dare Olulana, Oluwasegun Joshua Afolaranmi, AbdulBasit Fehintola, Annika Heuer, Matthias Priemel, Lennart Viezens, Martin Stangenberg, Marc Dreimann, Alonja Reiter, Jasmin Meyer, Leon Köpke, Uduak Offiong, Philip Mari Mshelbwala, Fashie Andrew Patrick, Aminu Muhammed Umar, N Otene ThankGod, Yuki Julius Ng, Syukri Ahmad Zubaidi, Murad Almasri, Rasaq Olaosebikan, Akila Muthukumar, Amon Ngongola, Azad Patel, Abdullahi Nuhu-Koko, Baba Jibrin, Gabriela Guillén, Sergio López, José Andrés Molino, Pablo Velasco, Omar Hamam, Rim Elmandouh, Nensi Melissa Ruzgar, Rachel Levinson, Shashwat Kala, Sarah Ullrich, Emily Christison-Lagay, Janice Hui Ling Wong, Reto Baertschiger, Essam Elhalaby, Guido Seitz, Judith Lindbert, Asimina Galli-Tsinopoulou, Calogero Virgone, Eric Mwangi Irungu, Outani Oumaima, Lily Saldana, Jan Godzinsky, Abdelbasit Ali, Mohamed Bella Jalloh, Nellie Bell, Annette Jacobsen, Israel Fernandez Pineda, Lucas Krauel, Waha Rahama, Hazim Elfatih, Arda Isik, Andrea Hayes-Jordan, Roshni Dasgupta, Krishna Kumar Govindarajan, Marta deAndres Crespo, Nitin James Peters, Santosh Kumar Mahalik, Rajat Piplani, Enono Yhoshu, K S Rajkumar, Sadi A Abukhalaf, Mohammed Miftah Faraj Almihashhish, Eman Salem Muftah Burzeiza, Raja Mari Mohammed Nasef, Benjamin J O'Sullivan, Mohamed Hassanin, Dave R Lal, Brian T Craig, Vishal Michael, M Joseph John, William Bhatti, Swati Daniel, Jyoti Dhiman, Hunar Mahal, Atul Suroy, Shruti Kakkar, Shaina Kamboj, Suraj Singh, AKM Khairul Basher, SM Rezanur Rahman, Md Asif Iqbal, Md Masud Rana, Monica Dobs, Mohamed Atef Mohamed Ghamry, Joana Monteiro, Marco Aurelio Ciriaco Padilha, Lucas Garschagen deCarvalho, Sandip Kumar Rahul, Digamber Chaubey, Rejin Kebudi, Sema Bay Buyukkapu, Kumaravel Sambandan, Smita Kayal, Gunaseelan Karunanithi, Bikash Kumar Naredi, Bibekanand Jindal, Ranya M Baddourah, Ayah Al Shraideh, Ahmad Ozair, Ankur Bajaj, Bal Krishna Ojha, Kaushal Kishor Singh, Atique Anwar, Vinay Suresh, Mohamad K Abou Chaar, Christopher O Bode, Justina O Seyi-Olajide, George C Ihediwa, Edamisan O Temiye, Adeseye M Akinsete, Iqra Effendi, Khaled Mamdouh, Mohamed Atef, Mohamed Faried, Jake A Kloeber, Robert L Owen, Alexander S Roth, J Hudson Barnett, Lucien P Jay, Paul J Galardy, Bernard Mbwele, Irene Nguma, Moshi Moshi Shabani, Amani Twaha, Bilal Matola, Mahmoud Maher Abdelnaby Alrahawy, Simone deOliveira Coelho, Ricardo Vianna deCarvalho, FernandaFerreira daSilva Lima, Moawia Mohammed AliElhassan, Nada Osman Yousif Elhaj, Hytham KS Hamid, Vincent E Nwatah, Adewumi B Oyesakin, RM Jeffri Ismail, Simone deCamposVieira Abib, Mayara Caroline Amorim Fanelli, Fernanda Kelly Marques de Souza, Sandeep Mohindra, Ninad R Patil, Richa Jain, Gopal Nambi, Norehan Johari, Anas Shikha, Win SabaiPhyu Han, Zahidah Ahmad, Yen Yan Lim, Roserahayu Idros, Noorainun Mohd Yusof, David Nelson Jaisingh, Fatema Naser AlFayez, Elana Kleinman, Taylor Ibelli, Rochelle Fayngor, Tzvi Najman, Etai Adam, Daniella Melamed, Cecilia Paasche, Farman Ali Laghari, Zainab Al Balushi, Abdulhakim Awadh SalimAl-Rawas, Ali Al Sharqi, Ammar Saif AlShabibi, Ismail Al Bulushi, Muna Alshahri, Abdulrahman AlMirza, Ola Al Hamadani, Jawaher Al Sharqi, Anisa Al Shamsi, Bashar Dawud, Sareya Al Sibai, Gilbert B Bonsaana, Edmund M Der, Francis A Abantanga, Bardisan Gawrieh, Hassan Salloum, Mohammad Ahmad Almahmod Alkhalil, Waseem Shater, Ali Farid Alelayan, Alaa Guzlan, Asmaa AM Albanna, Dayang AnitaAbdul Aziz, Azrina Syarizad Khutubul Zaman, Biobele J Brown, Ajiboye L Olalekan, Christopher S Lukong, Ezekiel I Ajayi, Luca Pio, Nitin James Peter, Ravi Kishore, Mohammad K Abou Chaar, Dayang Anita Abdul Aziz, Dhruva Nath Ghosh, and Raphael N Vuille-dit-Bille
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Introduction Childhood cancer is a leading cause of death. It is unclear whether the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted childhood cancer mortality. In this study, we aimed to establish all-cause mortality rates for childhood cancers during the COVID-19 pandemic and determine the factors associated with mortality.Methods Prospective cohort study in 109 institutions in 41 countries. Inclusion criteria: children
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- 2022
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23. Playful Pedagogy for Deeper Learning: Exploring the Implementation of the Play-Based Foundation Phase in Wales
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Wainwright, Nalda, Goodway, Jackie, Whitehead, Margaret, Williams, Andy, and Kirk, David
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The Welsh foundation phase is a play-based curriculum for 3-7-year-olds advocating outdoor and experiential approaches to learning. Play-based outdoor learning increases interaction with a range of affordances giving opportunities for movement in learning. Children assign activities as either play or not play-based on a series of cues. Teaching approaches that incorporate cues associated with play can influence pupil engagement and involvement in learning. This paper draws on data from a three-year study of the implementation of the foundation phase. Analysis of data from observations, field notes and video suggest pupils were more involved in tasks with higher levels of well-being when tasks were perceived as play. Leavres suggests increased involvement in learning may result in deeper learning.
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- 2020
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24. Expertise, Neoliberal Governmentality and the Outsourcing of Health and Physical Education
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Enright, Eimear, Kirk, David, and Macdonald, Doune
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As new markets and opportunities for profit are being sought within and around schools, boundaries between private and public, profit and philanthropy are blurring and the boundaries that circumscribe knowledge and expertise are being reconstituted. This paper considers how expertise is constituted when curriculum work is outsourced to new actors in the Global Education Industry (GEI). Our findings suggest that, in the context of the GEI, conventional understandings of expertise are problematic. Our data show that under conditions of neoliberalisation and in relation specifically to the outsourcing of Health and Physical Education, expertise was distributed and expressed in at least four forms: personal experiential knowledge; artefacts and resources; professional expertise (such as teaching) within partnerships as forms of extended complementarity; and the application of science and reverence for research evidence. We advocate for a reconceptualisation of expertise in education in ways that recognise its personal, relational and material nature.
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- 2020
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25. The Pedagogisation of Health Knowledge and Outsourcing of Curriculum Development: The Case of the Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Initiative
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Rossi, Tony and Kirk, David
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It is apparent that the dimensions of health within and under the auspices of schooling are open to contributions by other providers that exist outside of school systems. We acknowledge schools often resort to outside providers for a number of reasons; for example, to broaden the curriculum experiences for children, or to compensate for the absence of expertise within a school. The central focus for this paper is to try to understand these phenomena with particular reference to the Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden initiative. through the theoretical work of Basil Bernstein. Specifically, we were interested in the source of particular kinds of health knowledge for the purposes of acquisition by children, what journey does such knowledge travel to arrive in school classrooms and in the process, how and in what ways is it pedagogised under the conditions of outsourcing?
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- 2020
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26. Turning Outsourcing Inside-Out? The Case of the Mindfulness in Schools Project
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Kirk, David
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This paper provides an account of programmes in schools developed by the Mindfulness in Schools Project (MISP) as an example of the outsourcing of Health and Physical Education. The purpose of the paper is to show that outsourcing, is complex and does not match some of the expectations associated with this neoliberal practice. Responding to the argument that outsourcing is a form of curriculum development from the 'outside-in', I suggest that the MISP's work with schools is in contrast a form of 'turning outsourcing inside out'. I show that the success of the MISP programmes rested on teacher advocacy and commitment from inside schools. I argue that the practices of the MISP placed limits on the extent to which it might generate revenue to protect the integrity of its approach. I conclude by considering whether these practices to safeguard integrity were justified, or whether they were another example of what have been called 'intrusive pedagogies'.
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- 2020
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27. Why Is Physical Education More Stimulating for Pupils Who Are More Satisfied with Their Own Body?
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Kerner, Charlotte, Kirk, David, De Meester, An, and Haerens, Leen
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Objective: This study explored whether pupils' state body satisfaction during physical education related to the degree to which they indicated that physical education stimulated them to engage in sports activities outside of school. It also investigated whether pupils' self-determined motivation mediated this relationship, such that pupils with higher body satisfaction were more likely to value and enjoy the lessons, and to indicate they would re-engage in the activities outside of physical education. Methods: The study involved 506 13-14-year-old pupils (51.19% girls) in England, who completed validated questionnaires to measure perceived body satisfaction, motivation for physical education and the perceived sport promoting role of physical education. Results: Results showed that body satisfaction positively related to the perceived sport promoting role of physical education in girls. The relationship between state body satisfaction during physical education and the perceived sport promoting role of physical education was partially mediated by pupils' self-determined motivation. Conclusion: Pupils who felt more comfortable and satisfied with their physical appearance seemed to value and enjoy physical lessons more, and this more positive experience stimulated them to re-engage in the activities outside school.
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- 2019
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28. "We could perform much better if we had specific training for girls" -- Impacts of the embodiment of tradition for elite-level karateka women.
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Turelli, Fabiana Cristina, Kirk, David, and Fernandez Vaz, Alexandre
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MARTIAL artists ,COMBAT sports ,FEMINISM ,MARTIAL arts ,WOMEN'S sports ,WOMEN athletes ,WOMEN'S suffrage ,WOMEN'S rights - Abstract
Copyright of Retos: Nuevas Perspectivas de Educación Física, Deporte y Recreación is the property of Federacion Espanola de Asociaciones de Docentes de Educacion Fisica and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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29. 'Fighting like a girl': qualitative analysis of the gendered movement learning in the Spanish Olympic karate team.
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Turelli, Fabiana Cristina, Vaz, Alexandre Fernandez, Tejero-González, Carlos María, and Kirk, David
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KARATE ,ATHLETIC ability ,WOMEN'S sports ,ELITE athletes ,PHYSICAL education - Abstract
Female learning of movement in elite combat sports has not been studied enough to date. Literature on movement learning and teaching of complex skills has not, to date, focused on karate, and the scarce literature on the learning of elite karate practitioners mostly does not focus on women. Nevertheless, women fighters participated in karate as an Olympic sport, even if such status was temporary, limited to Tokyo 2020 (2021). In an analogy with Iris Marion Young's (1980) publication 'throwing like a girl', our aim in this study was to investigate what it means to learn 'to fight like a girl' and if there is a feminine learned fighting style. We have carried out an ethnographic project focusing, due to the unexpected impact of COVID-19, mainly on interviewing the female Spanish karate team in preparation for the Olympic Games. We interviewed 14 women athletes of the team and their four male coaches twice each and analysed 28 videos of women athletes displaying their best athletic performances, according to themselves. In this article we are focusing on the analysis of 20 videos of the kumite modality, then reflecting on this analysis with data from interviews of the four coaches and ten of the athletes, the kumite athletes. We developed a series of criteria in order to carry out the task of observation and analysis of the gendered martial-sportive movement supported by the literature, coaches' perspectives and athletes' views. The main concepts derived from the video analysis were the use of space, restricted movements; absence of melee work; and difficulty in carrying out projections/sweeps. Sports karate is still configured as a (hetero)normative environment, supported in tradition, be that of martial art with its pedagogy and of sport as a male preserve. This context leads to a view of women's learning to perform as inferior to men's, perpetually comparing them, in the hierarchical structure established within the field. Concepts of equality and equity are undermined, and by performing differently, or not matching the male model, women have their performance of some complex movements qualified as a natural inability. We conclude that there is a feminine way of learning to fight, but only with generalized characteristics since there is a rich plurality of styles among these elite sporting women. For the field, to fight like a girl means inferior performance in comparison with men's performance, however, for us, it means really 'to fight', not just on the mat, and we see such comparison as untenable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Defining specialism and functional species groups in birds: First steps toward a farmland bird indicator
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Kirk, David Anthony, Hébert, Katherine, Lindsay, Kathryn Freemark, and Kreuzberg, Elena
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- 2020
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31. Shifting from spring wheat to winter wheat: a potential conservation strategy for grassland songbirds in cultivated landscapes?
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Davis, Stephen K., Kirk, David Anthony, Armstrong, Llwellyn M., Devries, James H., and Fisher, Ryan J.
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- 2020
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32. Where the Other 1 Percent Live: An Examination of Changes in the Spatial Concentration of the Formerly Incarcerated
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Kirk, David S.
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- 2019
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33. Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on patients with paediatric cancer in low-income, middle-income and high-income countries: a multicentre, international, observational cohort study
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Mohamed Ahmed, Ahmad Mansour, Ahmed Samir, Charlotte Smith, Lubna Samad, Vaishnavi Govind, Fakher Rahim, Augusto Zani, Muhammad Arshad, Sadaf Altaf, Chan Hon Chui, Pooja Kumari, Thomas Smith, Ayesha Saleem, Darica Au, Kate Cross, Kokila Lakhoo, Anna Maria Testi, Robyn Brown, Noel Peter, Francesco Pata, Adesoji Ademuyiwa, Tahmina Banu, Bruce Bvulani, Milind Chitnis, Maryam Ghavami Adel, Matthew H V Byrne, Pierfrancesco Lapolla, Andrea Mingoli, Lucy Davies, Dennis Mazingi, Hamidah Alias, Simone de Campos Vieira Abib, Ibukunolu Olufemi Ogundele, Laila Hessissen, Mohammad Ahmad, Maricarmen Olivos, Daniel Rhee, Maryam Khan, Christine Nitschke, Alexandra Valetopoulou, Ashrarur Rahman Mitul, Sabbir Karim, Gaetano Gallo, Mohamedraed Elshami, Mahmoud Elfiky, Soham Bandyopadhyay, Muath Alser, Elliott H Taylor, Duha Jasim, Somy Charuvila, Nazmul Islam, William B Lo, Robin Simpson, Zarina Abdul Latiff, Bruno Cirillo, Gioia Brachini, Megan Murphy, Zineb Bentounsi, Anette S Jacobsen, Anna Casey, Abdulrasheed A Nasir, Taiwo Akeem Lawal, Samson Olori, Michael Boettcher, Muhammed Elhadi, Shaun Wilson, Dragana Janić, Patricia Shinondo, Shireen Anne Nah, Alhassan Abdul-Mumin, Dayang Anita Abdul Aziz, J Benjamin, Karl-Heinz Frosch, Poorvaprabha Patil, Sarah Muma, Emmanuel Uwiringiyimana, Athanasios Tragiannidis, Mahan Salehi, Sara Ali, Hafeez Abdelhafeez, Max Pachl, Benjamin Martin, Sonal Nagras, Mihir Sheth, Catherine Dominic, Suraj Gandhi, Divya Parwani, Rhea Raj, Diella Munezero, Rohini Dutta, Nsimire Mulanga Roseline, Kellie McClafferty, Armin Nazari, Smrithi Sriram, Sai Pillarisetti, Aishwarya Ashwinee, Gul Kalra, Priyansh Nathani, Khushman Kaur Bhullar, Nehal Rahim, Shweta Madhusudanan, Joshua Erhabor, Manasi Shirke, Aishah Mughal, Sravani Royyuru, Daniel Robinson, Mehdi Khan, Alexandre Dukundane, Kwizera Festus, Rohan Pancharatnam, Lorraine Ochieng, Hritik Nautiyal, Leanne Gentle, Ehab Hanafy, Catherine Yang, John Mathew, Olumide Abiodun Elebute, Oluwaseun Ladipo-Ajayi, Okechukwu Hyginus Ekwunife, Sherief Ghozy, Aya Zazo, Salah Eddine Oussama Kacimi, Ahmed Sherif, Krithi Ravi, Nermin Badwi, Hajar Moujtahid, Ariana Axiaq, Eman Abdulwahed, Kemal Tolga Saracoglu, Yasin Kara, Ahmed Y Azzam, Omar Elmandouh, KingDavid Nweze, Syeda Namayah Fatima Hussain, Marta de Andres Crespo, Fatumata Jalloh, Shahnur Shah, Rohini Rajpal, Masooma Rana, Muskaan Abdul Qadir, Abdelrahman Azzam, Mayara Fanelli, Gustavo Mendonça Ataíde Gomes, Igor Lima Buarque, Isadora Schwaab Guerini, Anfel Bouderbala, Sarah Alfurais, Mohamed Gamal, Yara Hijazi, Shatha Tailakh, Hamza AlNaggar, Zain Douba, Sewar Elejla, Abdullah Eldaly, Ekram Sharashi, Tamara Elyan, Aouabed Nesrine, Ammar Ayman, Mohamed Bonna, Safia Lorabi, Hassan Alalami, Rawan Yasser Emam, Mohamad K Abou Chaar, Hira Zuberi, Iyad Sultan, Dhruv Nath Ghosh, Nitin James Peters, Reto M Baertschiger, Kefas John Bwala, AM Umar, Abdurahaman Aremu, Dauda E Suleiman, Tybat Aliyu, Kashaf Turk, Oluseyi Oyebode Ogunsua, Tunde Talib Sholadoye, Musliu Adetola Tolani, Yakubu Alfa, Keffi Mubarak Musa, Mwangi Irungu, Ken Muma, Mitchelle Obat, Youssef Sameh Badran, Abdulrahman Ghassan Qasem, Faris Ayasra, Reema Alnajjar, Mohamed Abdel-Maboud, Abdelrahman Bahaa, Ayat M Saadeldin, Mohamed Adwi, Mahmoud Adly, Abdallah Elshenawy, Amer Harky, Kirstie Wright, Jessica Luyt, Olivia White, Nathan Thompson, Imogen Harrison, Sara Kader Alsaeiti, Fatma Saleh Benkhial, Mohammed Miftah Faraj Almihashhish, Eman Salem Muftah Burzeiza, Raja Mari Mohammed Nasef, Hend Mohammed Masoud, Mabroukah Saeid Alshamikh, Fatma Mohammed Masoud, Nyararai Togarepi, Elaine Carrolan, Mohamed Hassanin O'Sullivan, Ahmed Saleh, Mahmoud Bassiony, Mostafa Qatora, Mohamed Bahaaeldin, Shady Fadel, Yasmine El Chazli, Kamel Hamizi, Mehdi Anouar Zekkour, Rima Rahmoun, Boutheyna Drid, Salma Naje Abu Teir, Mohamed Yazid Kadir, Yassine Zerizer, Nacer Khernane, Brahim Saada, Imane Ammouze, Yahya Elkaoune, Ghita Chaoui, Hajar Benaouda, Meryem Gounni, Narjiss Aji, Joana Mafalda Monteiro, Susana Nunes, Maria do Bom-Sucesso, Dave R. Lal, Brian T. Craig, Kerri Becktell, Md Afruzul Alam, Orindom Shing Pulock, Tasmiah Tahera Aziz, Rosanda Ilic, Danica Grujicic, Tijana Nastasovic, Igor Lazic, Mihailo Milicevic, Vladimir Bascarevic, Radovan Mijalcic, Vuk Scepanovic, Aleksandar Stanimirovic, Aleksandra Paunovic, Ivan Bogdanovic, Shahnoor Islam, AKM Amirul Morshed, A. K. M. Khairul Basher, Mehnaz Akter, S. M. Rezanur Rahman, Zannat Ara, Mohammed Tanvir Ahammed, Tania Akter, Kamrun Nahar, Fatema Sayed, Ashfaque Nabi, Md. Asif Iqbal, Md. Masud Rana, Md. Asaduzzaman, Md. Hasanuzzaman, Elif Akova, Evren Aydogmus, Bekir Can Kendirlioglu, Tufan Hicdonmez, Arshiya Adhnon, Asim Noor Rana, Hani Humad, Anjan Madasu, Mohammed A Azab, Alzhraa Salah Abbas, Olanrewaju Moses, Ibiyeye Taiye Taibat, Taiwo Jones, Kalu Ukoha, Olagundoye Goke, Okorie Ikechukwu, Abiodun Idowu Okunlola, Helga Nauhaus, Danelle Erwee, Agata Chylinska, Prasanna Gomes, Marco Aurelio Ciriaco Padilha, Elvercio Pereira de Oliveira Junior, Lucas Garschagen de Carvalho, Fabiola Leonelli Diz, Mohamed El Kassas, Usama Eldaly, Ahmed Tawheed, Mohamed Abdelwahab, Oudrhiri Mohammed Yassaad, Bechri Hajar, El Ouahabi Abdessamad, Arkha Yasser, Hessissen Laila, Farah Sameer Yahya, Yasir Al-Agele, Maria Teresa Peña Gallardo, Jacqueline Elizabeth Montoya Vásquez, Juan Luis García León, Sebastián Shu Yip, Mariam Lami, Harmit Ghattaura, Eric W Etchill, Stacy Cooper, Kevin Crow, Morgan Drucker, Benjamin Shou, Alan Siegel, Gül Nihal Özdemir, Ehab El Refaee, John George Massoud, Ayah Bassam Ibrahim, Ruaa Bassam Ibrahim, Faris Abu Za'nouneh, Ranya M. Baddourah, Toqa Fahmawee, Ayah Al_Shraideh, Ghazwani Salman, Ehab Alameer, Al-Mudeer Ali, Ghazwani Yahia, Khozairi Waleed, Mohamad K. Abou Chaar, Khalil Ghandour, Shaima' Al-Dabaibeh, Ammar Al-Basiti, Hazim Ababneh, Omaima El-Qurneh, Yousef Alalawi, Ahmad Al Ayed, Naif Al Bolowi, Amos HP Loh, Heidi Barola, Aubrey L Pagaduan, Jingdan Fan, Adesoji O. Ademuyiwa, Christopher O. Bode, Justina O. Seyi-Olajide, Felix M. Alakaloko, George C. Ihediwa, Kareem O. Musa, Edamisan O. Temiye, Olufemi Oni, Adeseye M. Akinsete, Janita Zarrish, Ramsha Saleem, Soha Zahid, Atiqa Amirali, Ahsan Nadeem, Sameer Saleem Tebha, Zonaira Qayyum, Sana Tahir, Anneqa Tahir, Rabbey Raza Khan, Ayesha Mehmood, Taimur Iftikhar Qureshi, Victor Calvagna, Nathalie Galea, Matthew R Schuelke, Jake A. Kloebe, Robert L. Owen, Alexander S. Roth, J. Hudson Barnett, Lucien P. Jay, Kirk David Wyatt, Paul J. Galardy, Agnes Vojcek, Mahmoud Maher Abdelnaby Alrahawy, Seham M Ragab, Abdallah R Allam, Eman Ibrahim Hager, Kıvılcım Karadeniz Cerit, Adnan Dağçınar, Tümay Umuroğlu, Ayten Saraçoğlu, Mustafa Sakar, Can Kıvrak, Gül Çakmak, Ibrahim Sallam, Gamal Amira, Mohamed Sherief, Simone de Oliveira Coelho, Arissa Ikeda, Licia Portela, Marianne Monteiro Garrigo, Ricardo Vianna de Carvalho, Fernanda Lobo, Sima Ester Ferman, Fernanda Ferreira da Silva Lima, Moawia Mohammed Ali Elhassan, Nada Osman Yousif Elhaj, Hytham K. S. Hamid, Emmanuel A. Ameh, Vincent E. Nwatah, Adewumi B. Oyesakin, Andrew Nwankwo Osuigwe, Chisom Adaobi Nri-Ezedi, Eric Okechukwu Umeh, Nellie Patiala, Abiodun Folashade Adekanmbi, Olubunmi Motunrayo Fatungase, Olubunmi Obafemi Obadaini, Sarah Al-Furais, Humaida Hemlae, Sreylis Nay, R M Jeffri Ismail, Simonede Campos Vieira Abib, Fabianne Altruda de Moraes Costa Carlesse, Mayara Caroline Amorim Fanelli, Fernanda Kelly Marques de Souza, Denis Cozzi, Paolo Musiu, Paolo Sapienza, Martina Zambon, Simona Meneghini, Pierfranco Cicerchia, Abdulrahman Omar Taha, Bouaoud Souad, Mebarki Malika, Bioud Belkacem, Ayman Meelad, Hajier Salim Alrashed, Fayza Haider, Fatema Naser Al Fayez, Halwani Yaninga Fuseini, Peter Gyamfi Kwarteng, Abubakari Bawa Abdulai, Sheba Mary Pognaa Kunfah, Gilbert B. Bonsaana, Stephanie Ajinkpang, Edmund M. Der, Francis A. Abantanga, Mary Joan Kpiniong, Kingsley Aseye Hattor, Kingsley Appiah Bimpong, Mohamed Elbahnasawy, Sherief Abdelsalam, Reto M. Baertschiger, Amanpreet Brar, Andreea C Matei, Hira Khalid Zuberi, Kishwer Nadeem, Naema Khayyam, Fatima Ambreen Imran, Nida Zia, Sadia Muhammad, Muhammad Rafie Raza, Muhammad Rahil Khan, Alaa Hamdan, Abdeljawad Mazloum, Ali Abodest, Nisreen Ali, Bardisan Gawarieh, Ammar Omran, Almed Moussa, Alaa Ahmed, Munawar Hraib, Victor Khoury, Abdulrahman Almjersah, Mohammad Ali Deeb, Almahmod Alkhalil, Akram Ahmed, Ali Alelayan, Ali Hammed, Wassem Shater, Ahmad Bouhuwaish, Alqasim Abdulkarim, Marwa Biala, Reem Ghamgh, Amani Alamre, Marwa Shelft, Asmaa A. M. Albanna, Hoda Tawel, Emmanuel Hatzipantelis, Eleni Tsotridou, Assimina Galli-Tsinopoulou, C-Khai Loh, Doris Lau, Azrina Syarizad Khutubul, Raphael N. Vuille-dit-Bille, Stefan G. Holland-Cunz, Nima Allafi, Kelvin Ifeanyichukwu Egbuchulem, Olakayode Olaolu Ogundoyin, Isaac Dare Olulana, Biobele J. Brown, Oluwasegun Joshua Afolaranmi, AbdulBasit Fehintola, Annika Heuer, Matthias Priemel, Lennart Viezens, Martin Stangenberg, Marc Dreimann, Alonja Reiter, Jasmin Meyer, Leon Köpke, Uduak Offiong, Philip Mari Mshelbwala, Fashie Andrew Patrick, Aminu Muhammed Umar, N Otene ThankGod, Kazeem O. O. Ibrahim, Dupe S. Ademola-Popoola, Olayinka T. Sayomi, Alege Abdurrzzaq, Ademola A. Adeyeye, Khadijah O. Omokanye, Lukman O Abdur-Rahman, Olubisi Olutosin Bamidele, Shakirullah AbdulAzeez, Aminat Akinoso, Michael O. Adegboye, Yuki Julius Ng, Syukri Ahmad Zubaidi, Murad Almasri, Rasaq Olaosebikan, Akila Muthukumar, Amon Ngongola, Azad Patel, Abdullahi Nuhu-Koko, Baba Jibrin, Ajiboye L. Olalekan, Christopher S. Lukong, Ezekiel I. Ajayi, Gabriela Guillén, Sergio López, José Andrés Molino, Pablo Velasco, Omar Hamam, Rim Elmandouh, Nensi Melissa Ruzgar, Rachel Levinson, Shashwat Kala, Sarah Ullrich, Emily Christison-Lagay, Aya Sabry Mortada, Mahmoud Ahmed Ebada, Eman Seif Alnaser Solimam, Khaled Abualkher, Amr Mohammed Elsayed Yousf, Mohamed Mohamed Holail, Reem Mohamed Almowafy, Janice Hui Ling Wong, Reto Baertschiger, Essam Elhalaby, Mahmoud M. Saad, Guido Seitz, Judith Lindbert, Francis Abantanga Georgios Tsoulfas, Asimina Galli-Tsinopoulou, Calogero Virgone, Mohammad K. Abou Chaar, Eric Mwangi Irungu, Outani Oumaima, Lily Saldana, Jan Godzinsky, Abdelbasit Ali, Mohamed Bella Jalloh, Nellie Bell, Annette Jacobsen, Israel Fernandez Pineda, Lucas Krauel, Waha Rahama, Hazim Elfatih, Arda Isik, Andrea Hayes-Jordan, and Roshni Dasgupta
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Medicine - Abstract
Objectives Paediatric cancer is a leading cause of death for children. Children in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) were four times more likely to die than children in high-income countries (HICs). This study aimed to test the hypothesis that the COVID-19 pandemic had affected the delivery of healthcare services worldwide, and exacerbated the disparity in paediatric cancer outcomes between LMICs and HICs.Design A multicentre, international, collaborative cohort study.Setting 91 hospitals and cancer centres in 39 countries providing cancer treatment to paediatric patients between March and December 2020.Participants Patients were included if they were under the age of 18 years, and newly diagnosed with or undergoing active cancer treatment for Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, Hodgkin lymphoma, Wilms’ tumour, sarcoma, retinoblastoma, gliomas, medulloblastomas or neuroblastomas, in keeping with the WHO Global Initiative for Childhood Cancer.Main outcome measure All-cause mortality at 30 days and 90 days.Results 1660 patients were recruited. 219 children had changes to their treatment due to the pandemic. Patients in LMICs were primarily affected (n=182/219, 83.1%). Relative to patients with paediatric cancer in HICs, patients with paediatric cancer in LMICs had 12.1 (95% CI 2.93 to 50.3) and 7.9 (95% CI 3.2 to 19.7) times the odds of death at 30 days and 90 days, respectively, after presentation during the COVID-19 pandemic (p
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- 2022
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34. Body Dissatisfaction, Perceptions of Competence, and Lesson Content in Physical Education
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Kerner, Charlotte, Haerens, Leen, and Kirk, David
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Background: Significant proportions of young people experience body dissatisfaction, which has implications for psychological and physical well-being. Lesson content and perceived competence may be important variables for the experience of body dissatisfaction, yet these have been underexplored in physical education. The aim of this cross-sectional study is to identify the relationships between body dissatisfaction and perceptions of competence, and to explore whether body dissatisfaction depends on lesson content. Methods: A paper-and-pencil questionnaire was completed by 446 (210 boys, 236 girls) 13- to 14-year-old pupils from 37 physical education classes. The questionnaire assessed body dissatisfaction and perceived competence in physical education. Lesson content was also recorded. Twenty-nine of the classes were engaged in team activities, e.g., ball games. Eight classes were engaged in individual activities, eg, fitness. Results: Multilevel analysis identified a significant negative association between body dissatisfaction and perceptions of competence in physical education. Lesson content did not significantly predict variations in body dissatisfaction scores. Conclusions: Teachers should focus on enhancing pupils' perceptions of competence in physical education to support the development of body satisfaction.
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- 2018
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35. Understanding Body Image in Physical Education: Current Knowledge and Future Directions
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Kerner, Charlotte, Haerens, Leen, and Kirk, David
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Body image disturbance in children and adolescents has negative implications for psychological and physical well-being. To positively impact well-being, it is important to explore factors that influence body image and to identify strategies that can be used to reduce body image disturbance. The school curriculum can play a significant role in shaping how children and adolescents experience their bodies. Within this school curriculum, physical education lessons represent one of the only school subjects in which the body is a focus of curricular outcomes. In physical education, the body is judged for physical ability but is also situated in a space that provides the potential for social comparisons and body judgements. Significant attention has been paid to the development of classroom-based interventions that aim at reducing body image disturbance, yet physical education has largely been ignored as a context in which one can effectively intervene. This paper reviews current knowledge on the relationship between physical education and body image disturbance by using the cognitive-behavioural model of body image developments as a guiding framework. It also considers the contribution that physical education could make to wider school-based interventions.
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- 2018
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36. Transformational Teacher Leadership in Rural Schools
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Anderson, Kirk David
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In this paper, the author explores the rural school context and its teacher leaders as a third transformational leadership prototype adding to Leithwood and Jantzi's (1999) two transformational leadership prototypes of females and new teachers in the elementary school. The author helps illuminate new understanding of rural schools and their highly interactive decision making styles where teacher leaders are a source of creativity development of unique forms of leadership. If researchers focus on teachers as leaders in rural schools, specifically those who operate outside of traditional leadership roles, there exists a promising area of new understanding for educational leadership as transformational teacher leadership. (Contains 2 tables.)
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- 2008
37. 462: USING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE TO PREDICT WHICH PATIENTS ARE NOT GOING TO DETERIORATE
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Pessach, Itai, Chen, Ofer, Rosenberg, Ornah, Celniker, Gershon, Lipsky, Ari, Forgacs, Andrea, Lilly, Craig, Edwards, Amanda, and Kirk, David
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- 2022
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38. 460: DEVELOPMENT OF AI-BASED MODELS FOR PREDICTING LIFE-THREATENING EVENTS IN CRITICALLY ILL PATIENTS
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Pessach, Itai, Kirk, David, Chen, Ofer, Lipsky, Ari, Lieder, Iris, Celniker, Gershon, Lilly, Craig, Cucchi, Eric, and Blum, James
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- 2022
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39. 203: INCIDENCE OF THROMBOTIC EVENTS WITH DIFFERENT ANTITHROMBOTIC STRATEGIES IN PATIENTS WITH COVID-19
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Dobbins, Kelsey, Ledford, J. Erin (Allender), Woodfield, Emily, Fox, Daniel, Edwards, Amanda, Grant, Mollie, Gurganious, Cristina, and Kirk, David
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- 2022
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40. Farm management and landscape context shape plant diversity at wetland edges in the Prairie Pothole Region of Canada.
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Kirk, David Anthony, Martínez‐Lanfranco, Juan Andrés, Forsyth, Douglas J., and Martin, Amanda E.
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FARM management ,PLANT diversity ,ORGANIC farming ,PLANT species diversity ,AGRICULTURE ,WETLAND plants ,HERBACEOUS plants ,WOODY plants - Abstract
Evaluating the impacts of farming systems on biodiversity is increasingly important given the need to stem biodiversity loss, decrease fossil fuel dependency, and maintain ecosystem services benefiting farmers. We recorded woody and herbaceous plant species diversity, composition, and abundance in 43 wetland‐adjacent prairie remnants beside crop fields managed using conventional, minimum tillage, organic, or perennial cover (wildlife‐friendly) land management in the Prairie Pothole Region. We used a hierarchical framework to estimate diversity at regional and local scales (gamma, alpha), and how these are related through species turnover (beta diversity). We tested the expectation that gamma richness/evenness and beta diversity of all plants would be higher in remnants adjacent to perennial cover and organic fields than in conventional and minimum tillage fields. We expected the same findings for plants providing ecosystem services (bee‐pollinated species) and disservices (introduced species). We predicted similar relative effects of land management on alpha diversity, but with the expectation that the benefits of organic farming would decrease with increasing grassland in surrounding landscapes. Gamma richness and evenness of all plants were highest for perennial cover, followed by minimum tillage, organic, and conventional sites. Bee‐pollinated species followed a similar pattern for richness, but for evenness organic farming came second, after perennial cover sites, followed by minimum tillage and conventional. For introduced species, organic sites had the highest gamma richness and evenness. Grassland amount moderated the effect of land management type on all plants and bee‐pollinated plant richness, but not as expected. The richness of organic sites increased with the amount of grassland in the surrounding landscape. Conversely, for conventional sites, richness increased as the amount of grassland in the landscape declined. Our results are consistent with the expectation that adopting wildlife‐friendly land management practices can benefit biodiversity at regional and local scales, in particular the use of perennial cover to benefit plant diversity at regional scales. At more local extents, organic farming increased plant richness, but only when sufficient grassland was available in the surrounding landscape; organic farms also had the highest beta diversity for all plants and bee‐pollinated plants. Maintaining native cover in agroecosystems, in addition to low‐intensity farming practices, could sustain plant biodiversity and facilitate important ecosystem services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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41. 'Go for It Girl' Adolescent Girls' Responses to the Implementation of an Activist Approach in a Core Physical Education Programme
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Lamb, Cara A, Oliver, Kimberly L, and Kirk, David
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This paper reports on the responses from adolescent girls to the use of an activist approach (Oliver, K. L., & Kirk, D. (2015). "Girls, gender and physical education: An activist approach." London: Routledge) by their teachers over the course of one school year during their core physical education lessons. The study took place in four secondary schools in different areas of Glasgow city. Approximately 110 girls aged 13-14 participated in this study as part of their regular physical education classes. The themes arising from the data were: (1) through variety and choice the girls were opened up to a wider range of possibilities in physical education; (2) relationships between peers (pupil-pupil) and teachers-pupils were central to the girls' engagement. We conclude that through the use of an activist approach, and in contrast to their experience of traditional, multi-activity physical education, girls responded positively to variety and choice as they co-constructed their physical education programme with their teachers, and the development of better relationships with their teacher and among themselves created a supportive learning environment.
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- 2018
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42. Laying the Foundations for Physical Literacy in Wales: The Contribution of the Foundation Phase to the Development of Physical Literacy
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Wainwright, Nalda, Goodway, Jackie, Whitehead, Margaret, Williams, Andy, and Kirk, David
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Background: The Foundation Phase in Wales is a play-based curriculum for pupils aged 3-7 years old. Children learn through more holistic areas of learning in place of traditional subjects. As such, the subject of physical education in its traditional form no longer exists for pupils under the age of 7 in Wales. In light of the role of physical education in developing physical literacy and in particular the importance of this age group for laying the foundations of movement for lifelong engagement in physical activity, the disappearance of physical education from the curriculum could be deemed to be a concern. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore the Foundation Phase as a naturalistic intervention and examine its contribution to the development of physical literacy. Participants and setting: Participants included year 1 pupils (N = 49) aged 5 and 6 from two schools in contrasting locations. A smaller group within each class was selected through purposive sampling for the repeated measures assessments (N = 18). Research design and methods: A complementarity mixed-method design combined quantitative and qualitative methods to study the Foundation Phase as a naturalistic intervention. Quantitative data were generated with the Test of Gross Motor Development-2 administered to the sample group of children from both schools as a quasi-repeated measure, the physical competence subscale of the Pictorial Scale of Perceived Competence and Social Acceptance and the Leuven Involvement Scale for Young Children. Qualitative data were generated throughout the study from the analysis of video and field notes through participant observation. Data from the mixed methods were analysed through complementarity to give a rich insight into pupils' progress and experiences in relation to physical literacy. Results: Overall analysis of the data from TGMD-2 showed significant improvements in the Gross Motor Quotient and Locomotor skills from T1 to T3, but no significant improvement in object control. Data from qualitative methods were analysed to explore processes that may account for these findings. Video and field notes complement the quantitative data highlighting that children were developing their locomotor skills in many aspects of their learning. Observations using the Leuven Involvement Scale indicated that children had high levels of involvement in their learning and apparent in video and field notes was pupils' motivation for movement. Paired sample "t"-tests (N = 18) conducted on the Harter and Pike perceived physical competence six-item score subscales (T1 and T3) indicated a significant difference in the mean perceived physical competence scores on the six-item scale between T1and T3. Qualitative data explored pupils' confidence for movement in many areas of learning. Conclusion: The combination of quantitative and qualitative data indicates that the Foundation Phase is an early childhood curriculum that lays the foundations of physical literacy with the exception of aspects of the physical competence, specifically object control skills. Although these skills only contribute to psychomotor aspects of physical literacy they are strongly associated with later engagement in physical activity. The development of specific physical skills such as object control skills may need more specialist input with early childhood pedagogy teachers trained in motor development to see significant improvements.
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- 2018
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43. Rich pictures for stakeholder dialogue: A polyphonic picture book
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Durrant, Abigail C., Kirk, David S., Moncur, Wendy, Orzech, Kathryn M., Taylor, Robyn, and Trujillo Pisanty, Diego
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- 2018
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44. Experiences in Designing Technologies for Honoring Deceased Loved Ones
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Odom, William, Uriu, Daisuke, Kirk, David, Banks, Richard, and Wakkary, Ron
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- 2018
45. Spomenik : Resurrecting Voices in the Woods
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Kirk, David, Durrant, Abigail C., Kosem, Jim, and Reeves, Stuart
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- 2018
46. Muscularity, the Habitus and the Social Construction of Gender: Towards a Gender-Relevant Physical Education
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Gorely, Trish, Holroyd, Rachel, and Kirk, David
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- 2003
47. Seeking the Ultimate and Proximate Causes of Volvox Multicellularity and Cellular Differentiation
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Kirk, David L.
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- 2003
48. Effects of feeding an immunomodulatory supplement to heat-stressed or actively cooled cows during late gestation on postnatal immunity, health, and growth of calves
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Skibiel, Amy L., Fabris, Thiago F., Corrá, Fabiana N., Torres, Yazielis M., McLean, Derek J., Chapman, James D., Kirk, David J., Dahl, Geoffrey E., and Laporta, Jimena
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- 2017
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49. Subtle differences in birds detected between organic and nonorganic farms in Saskatchewan Prairie Parklands by farm pair and bird functional group
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Kirk, David Anthony and Lindsay, Kathryn E. Freemark
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- 2017
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50. Effect of nutritional immunomodulation and heat stress during the dry period on subsequent performance of cows
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Fabris, Thiago F., Laporta, Jimena, Corra, Fabiana N., Torres, Yazielis M., Kirk, David J., McLean, Derek J., Chapman, J.D., and Dahl, Geoffrey E.
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- 2017
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